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OpenAI’s o3-Mini Is a Leaner AI Model That Keeps Pace With DeepSeek

Jan 31, 2025 2:27 PM

OpenAI’s o3-Mini Is a Leaner AI Model That Keeps Pace With DeepSeek

On the heels of DeepSeek R1, the latest model from OpenAI promises more advanced capabilities at a cheaper price.

Photo-Illustration: Wired Staff; Beata Zawrzel/Getty Images

OpenAI is making a smaller, more efficient version of its cleverest artificial intelligence model available for free as it seeks to answer the hype and enthusiasm swirling around a new open source offering from Chinese AI startup DeepSeek.

WIRED previously reported that OpenAI was prepping the new model, called o3-mini, for release on January 31. The company’s researchers have been working overtime to get it ready for prime time, according to sources who spoke on the condition of anonymity.

o3-mini, which OpenAI teased in December, is a smaller version of the model that features the most advanced AI reasoning capabilities of any OpenAI offering to date. The model can break difficult problems into constituent parts in order to figure out how best to solve them.

“This powerful and fast model advances the boundaries of what small models can achieve,” the company said in a blog post announcing o3-mini’s availability.

OpenAI is making o3-mini available to all Plus, Team, and Pro users of ChatGPT. Users of the free version of ChatGPT will also be able to try o3-mini but won't be able to send as many queries, the company says.

OpenAI has evidently been using PhD students to help train a new model for some time. Several weeks ago, the company began recruiting PhD computer science students at $100 per hour for a “research collaboration” that would “involve working on unreleased models,” according to an email viewed by WIRED.

OpenAI also appears to have been recruiting PhD students with expertise in other areas through a company called Mercor that it regularly uses to find staff for model training. A recent job posting from Mercor on LinkedIn states: “The overall goal of this project that you may become a part of is to create challenging scientific coding questions designed to test the capabilities of large language models in generating code for solving realistic scientific research problems.”

The job posting goes on to give an example problem that is strikingly similar to a problem in a benchmark called SciCode that is designed to test a large language model’s ability to solve complex science problems.

The news comes as DeepSeek’s R1 continues to roil the US tech industry. The fact that such a powerful model could be released for free puts pressure on Google and Anthropic to lower their prices.

OpenAI is particularly eager to demonstrate that it remains at the forefront of developing and commercializing AI, according to sources inside the company.

DeepSeek’s freely available model incorporates innovations that made it more efficient to both train and serve. The company appears to have developed it using far fewer resources than OpenAI and other US companies currently building frontier AI models, although the precise details of DeepSeek’s expenditure remain unknown. OpenAI says it believes R1 may have incorporated the output from its models into its training.


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OpenAI’s newest model may not outshine R1 in terms of price, but it shows that the company will make efficiency part of its focus going forward. OpenAI also says that the model is especially strong in math, science, and coding.

The company says that the latest model will also incorporate new features, including the ability to tap into web searches, call functions from a user’s code, and toggle between different reasoning levels that trade off speed for problem-solving capabilities.

DeepSeek’s sudden rise has also raised questions about the US government’s strategy to curb China’s rise in AI. The past two US administrations have introduced a number of sanctions to curb China’s ability to access the most advanced Nvidia chips typically used to build cutting-edge AI models. DeepSeek described several types of Nvidia chips in its research, but it remains unclear what exactly was used.

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Will Knight is a senior writer for WIRED, covering artificial intelligence. He writes the AI Lab newsletter, a weekly dispatch from beyond the cutting edge of AI—sign up here. He was previously a senior editor at MIT Technology Review, where he wrote about fundamental advances in AI and China’s AI … Read more
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